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Maintenance Tips · May 2, 2026

Soft Wash vs. Pressure: When To Use Which

Most exterior cleaning failures come from using the wrong tool. Here's the rule of thumb.

Soft Wash vs. Pressure: When To Use Which

Soft wash means low pressure plus the right chemistry. Pressure wash means high pressure with mostly water. Picking the wrong one is how houses get damaged.

The rule

If the surface is alive, painted, or porous — soft wash it. That's siding, shingle roofs, painted wood, screens, awnings, soft stucco.

If the surface is hard, dense, and inert — pressure wash it. Concrete, brick, stone, hardscape. These can take 3500–4000 PSI through a surface cleaner without damage.

Why it matters

High pressure on siding forces water behind seams. It blows out caulk, lifts paint, and bruises wood. The damage isn't always visible the day after — but it shows up in the form of rot, peeling, and accelerated aging twelve months later.

Soft wash uses surfactants and biocides to do the cleaning chemically. The water is just there to rinse. The surface comes out cleaner and stays clean longer.

What to ask a contractor

  • "Are you soft washing my siding or pressure washing it?"
  • "What PSI are you running on the roof?"
  • "How long do you let the solution dwell?"
  • If they don't have answers, find someone who does.

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    By

    Grime Scene Power Washing

    South Coast MA & Rhode Island

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